Association between prenatal air pollutant exposure and autism spectrum disorders in young children: A matched case-control study in Canada

The direction and magnitude of association between maternal exposure to ambient air pollutants across gestational windows and offspring risk of autism spectrum disorders (ASD) remains unclear. We sought to evaluate the time-varying effects of prenatal air pollutant exposure on ASD. We conducted a ma...

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Veröffentlicht in:Environmental research 2024-11, Vol.261, p.119706, Article 119706
Hauptverfasser: Murphy, Malia SQ, Abdulaziz, Kasim E., Lavigne, Éric, Erwin, Erica, Guo, Yanfang, Dingwall-Harvey, Alysha LJ, Stieb, David, Walker, Mark C., Wen, Shi Wu, Shin, Hwashin Hyun
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:The direction and magnitude of association between maternal exposure to ambient air pollutants across gestational windows and offspring risk of autism spectrum disorders (ASD) remains unclear. We sought to evaluate the time-varying effects of prenatal air pollutant exposure on ASD. We conducted a matched case-control study of singleton term children born in Ontario, Canada from 1-Apr-2012 to 31-Dec-2016. Provincial birth registry data were linked with applied behavioural analysis services and ambient air pollutant datasets to ascertain prenatal exposure to nitrogen dioxide (NO2), ground-level ozone (O3), fine particulate matter (PM2.5), and ASD diagnoses. Covariate balance between cases and controls was established using coarsened exact matching. Conditional logistic regression was used to assess the association between prenatal air pollutant exposure and ASD. Distributed lag non-linear models (DLNM) were used to examine the effects of single-pollutant exposure by prenatal week. Sensitivity analyses were conducted to assess the impact of exposure period on the observed findings. The final sample included 1589 ASD cases and 7563 controls. Compared to controls, cases were more likely to be born to mothers living in urban areas, delivered by Caesarean section, and assigned male sex at birth. NO2 was a consistent and significant contributor to ASD risk after accounting for co-exposure to O3, PM2.5 and covariates. The odds ratio per interquartile range increase was 2.1 (95%CI 1.8–2.3) pre-conception, 2.2 (2.0–2.5) for the 1st trimester, 2.2 (1.9–2.5) for the 2nd trimester, and 2.1 (1.9–2.4) for the 3rd trimester. In contrast, findings for O3 and PM2.5 with ASD were inconsistent. Findings from DLNM and sensitivity analyses were similar. Exposure to NO2 before and during pregnancy was significantly associated with ASD in offspring. The relationship between prenatal O3 and PM2.5 exposure and ASD remains unclear. Further investigation into the combined effects of multi-pollutant exposure on child neurodevelopment is warranted. [Display omitted] •ASD cases were more likely to be male and born to mothers living in urban areas.•Prenatal exposure to NO2 was a consistent and significant contributor to ASD risk.•The odds ratio per IQR (7.7 ppb) increase was 2.2 (2.0–2.5) for trimester 1.•No time-varying effect of NO2 was found by trimester.•Prenatal exposure to O3 and/or PM2.5 was inconsistent contributor to ASD risk.
ISSN:0013-9351
1096-0953
1096-0953
DOI:10.1016/j.envres.2024.119706